"...It thus appears that it is highly important for us to have clear and spiritual views of the foreknowledge of God. Erroneous conceptions about it lead inevitably to thoughts most dishonouring to Him. The popular idea of Divine foreknowledge is altogether inadequate. God not only knew the end from the beginning, but He planned, fixed, predestinated everything from the beginning. And, as cause stands to effect, so Gods purpose is the ground of His prescience. If then the reader be a real Christian, he is so because God chose him in Christ before the foundation of the world (Eph 1:4), and chose not because He foresaw you would believe, but chose simply because it pleased Him to choose; chose you notwithstanding your natural unbelief. This being so, all the glory and praise belongs alone to Him. You have no ground for taking any credit to yourself. You have believed through grace (Acts 18:27), and that, because your very election was of grace (Rom 11:5)."
And here's Warfield's terrific essay...
No matter what we may say of Predestination in moments of puzzlement, as we stand in face of the problems of lifethe problem of the petty, the problem of suffering, the problem of sinit is safe to say that at the bottom of our minds we all believe in it. We cannot help believing in itif we believe in God; and that, in its utmost extension, as applying to everything about us which comes to pass...""...To say Predestination is to say all this. It is to introduce order into the universe. It is to assign an end and a worthy end to it. It enables us to speak of a far off divine event to which the whole creation is moving. It enables us to see that whatever occurs, great or small, has a place to fill in this universal teleology; and thus has significance given it, and a juustification supplied to it. To say Predestination is thus not only to say God; it is also to say Theodicy.
Ah, there it is. Thank you so much, and for the one from Pink. I've copied them both now. Simply from the perspective of logic, the Apostolic idea of predestination appears to be meaningless (God as stenographer). Even if I wasn't biased, this one would still never make sense to me.